Users often request that new variables be added to host, service, and contact definitions. These include variables for “SNMP” community, MAC address, AIM username, Skype number, and street address. The list is endless. The problem that I see with doing this is that it makes Nagios less generic and more infrastructure-specific. Nagios was intended to be flexible, which meant things needed to be designed in a generic manner. Host definitions in Nagios, for example, have a generic “address” variable that can contain anything from an IP address to human-readable driving directions - whatever is appropriate for the user’s setup.

Still, there needs to be a method for admins to store information about their infrastructure components in their Nagios configuration without imposing a set of specific variables on others. Nagios attempts to solve this problem by allowing users to define custom variables in their object definitions. Custom variables allow users to define additional properties in their host, service, and contact definitions, and use their values in notifications, event handlers, and host and service checks.

Custom variable values can be referenced in scripts and executables that Nagios runs for checks, notifications, etc. by using macros or environment variables.

In order to prevent name collision among custom variables from different object types, Nagios prepends “_HOST”, “_SERVICE”, or “_CONTACT” to the beginning of custom host, service, or contact variables, respectively, in macro and environment variable names. The table below shows the corresponding macro and environment variable names for the custom variables that were defined in the example above.